w .--- The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 8, 1995 - 25 Players vote on fate of BA uion NEW YORK (AP)-NBA play- : turned out in large numbers Thursday to complete voting on the Fate of their union, with opposing si4es in the dispute optimistic about wipping. Players voted on union egertification at sites around the :ountry, and the results are to be unuounced Tuesday. The players were to decide whether to retain the National Bas- ketball Players Association as their :oJlective bargaining representative. * "yes" vote was considered a vote Fo a proposed labor deal that would increase the salary cap but close several existing loopholes. NBA commissioner David Stern, who locked out players July 1, has aid a "yes" vote is the only way to guairantee the season starting on time. VA large turnout would suggest . players who favor the agree- nent and the union came out and voted for it," said Simon Gourdine, ihe union's executive director. The exact number of players vot- ng - 423 were eligible - was vailable, but NBA deputy com- mssioner Russ Granik said Thurs- Iay evening teams keeping tabs on he oting estimated a high turnout. "We think something over 300 players will have voted when this is over, and maybe more," he said. The group backing decertification was equally sure the vote would go its way. "We're optimistic about the cur- rent state ofthe election," said Jeffrey Kessler, the lawyer representing Michael Jordan, Patrick Ewing and other players advocating decertification. "Everything we're heeling indicates we're going to win A simple majority is needed to ecertify. Votes will be counted pub- icly at the National Labor Rela- diis Board office in New York. If players vote to retain theunion, player representatives from each ea will meet Sept. 13 to officially tify the agreement. Twenty-one f the 27 reps must approve it. Team owners then will vote, and heir approval would end the lock- . Patrick Ewing, along with Jor- dWi'the leading advocate of abolish- *ng the union, reiterated his claim lh decertification, not a faulty la- agreement, is the best way to ake sure no games are lost. "We would ratherthe season start n time," he said after voting here. But the NBA has locked us out. It's 11 in their hands. If anything hap- ns (to the season), it should be lamed on the owners, not us." Doc Rivers, the veteran guard ho played for San Antonio last eason, said the summer-long labor rmoil hasjolted his colleagues out -f their apathetic attitude toward :itract negotiations. "I know far more about labor aws than I thought I would have to ow," he said. "But I do know about them now rid it's probably good. It's prob- bly too bad I just started learning bout it. I think all of us as players hould have known about this stuff or a year. It took this to get our ttention, and that's too bad." Among the players voting in Los geles were Reggie Miller, who ks decertification, and Shaquille 'Neal, who supports the union, lthough neither would say how he oted. Boston's Dino Radja, who fa- ors decertification, voted in New ork after flying in-at the NBA's xpense-from his home in Croatia. hicago's Luc Longley voted in Los geles after journeying from his tive Australia. To encourage voting, the NBA ffered to pay transportation costs or players to vote at any of the 47 ites across the country and in Puerto +co. The labor dispute moves into the ourtroom Thursday, when U.S. dis- ct judge David Doty will hear otions on the antitrust suit against e NBA filed by Ewing, Jordan and 14 other players. The players will ask Doty for a Osborne lifts ban on Nebraska student paper AP PHOTO Before yesterday's 66, Russ Cochran had never broken par at Glen Abbey. Cochran fires six-under 66, takes lead in Canadian Open LINCOLN, Neb. -(AP)Nebraska coach Tom Osborne has rescinded a ban to bar the student newspaper from practice, vowing instead to decline in- terviews with the paper's reporters. Osborne declared the ban for Daily Nebraskan reporters after two cartoons critical of football players were pub- lished last week. Osborne, who called the cartoons inappropriate, said: "At- tending our practice is a privilege, not a right." The first cartoon, published last Thursday, showed a caricature of re- ceiverRiley Washingtonpracticing ina prison jumpsuit and a ball and chain while four other players watched. Washington is chargedwith attempt- ing second-degree murderinashooting Aug. 2 at a Lincoln convenience store. He has practiced with the team since late last month. The other cartoon depicted running back Lawrence Phillips driving a car with dollar bills blowing out the back. The NCAA is reviewing the rela- tionship betweenPhillips, ajunior from West Covina, Calif., and owners of the group home where he lived as a teen- ager. The owners have said they leased a 1995 MustangconvertibleforPhillips and provided him with other benefits. Osborne lifted the ban Wednesday evening and replaced it with stricter rules for all reporters. Nebraska sports information director Chris Anderson said she didn't know why Osborne changed his mind. Reporters, including those from the Daily Nebraskan, will be allowed to attend the first 15 minutes of practice, Anderson said late Wednesday. The first 15 minutes have traditionally been open. After practice, reporters will be escorted to a briefing. Reporters can requestprivateinterviewswithOsborne, but he will exercise his option to refuse requests from the Daily Nebraskan. Osborne defended the ban during a call-in radio show Wednesday evening. When a caller suggested that he overreacted, Osborne said, "I don't do anything where I fly off the handle pretty much." Journalism professors said that the ban was illegal. "I don't think the coach has any legal authority to do what he's doing," prcfessor Alfred Pagel Jr. said Wednes- day. "He's the coach. Coaches tend to think that everything that affects their team is their business." The university's legal team began looking into the matter Wednesdaybut declined to comment. Pagel and Daily Nebraskan editor J. Christopher Hain, meanwhile, said they thought the ban was illegal. "This sort of issue is one that's left to each institution," said Steve Mallonee, director of legislative services for the NCAA. "I've neverheard of something like this before, but that doesn't mean it's not happening." Coaches have closed practices for years to avoid being scouted by the opposition. But the ban raised ques- tions of whether Nebraska reporters, who are fee-paying students, can be kept from practice or anywhere else on campus. School officials said there was no official policy on barring people frorm team practices. Professor John Bender, who teaches communications law and freedom of information at Nebraska, said there are several court opinions that protect re porters from being denied access by government entities. "I think he has overstepped his bounds,"Bendersaid. "Asanofficialof the state... hecan'tdiscriminateagainst different media on sex, race or religion - or on the basis of whether he likes a cartoon or not." Osborne said the Daily Nebraskan will continue to be welcome at his weekly news conference. James Mehsling, who drew the car- toons, said Osborne was overreacting. Hain said the Washington cartoon was intended to criticize Nebraska's decision to allow the junior to practice. The Phillips cartoon, he said, raises questions under investigation by the NCAA. "Whether successful or not, sports figures and their mishaps are part of the public discussion," Hain said. OAKVILLE, Ontario (AP) - Cold, blustery weather was just what Russ Cochran needed Thursday to tame Glen Abbey, a golfcourse where he had never before broken par. Cochranbirdied the final hole from the back bunker for a 6-under-par 66 and a one-shot lead over New Zealand's Grant Waite in the wind- swept first round of the $1.3 million Canadian Open. Temperatures dropped to the low 50s near the shores of Lake Ontario. Many players wore sweaters or foul- weather gear, walking with hands in their pockets between shots. Waite had a one-shot lead over ev- era players, including Bill Glasson and Andrew Magee. Jim Gallagher Jr., a two-time winner this season, was in a large group at 69. Hawaiian Open win- ner John Morse led a group at 70. Fred Couples shot 71. Defending champion Nick Price and Lee Janzen, a three-time winner this season, were among those at 72. In three previous trips to this Toronto suburb, Cochran missed the cut twice and withdrew once after a miserable first round. On his last trip north, in 1992, he was sent packing after consecutive rounds of 80. Glen Abbey, perhaps Canada's finestpublic golfcourse, was designed by Jack Nicklaus. "It's a great golf course. It just doesn't necessarily suit my game," said Cochran, who was sidelined al- mos thre months this season with a herniated neck disc. "I hit the ball low. These greens favor a player who hits the ball high." % Cochran, whose only career vic- tory on the PGA Tour was the 1991 Western Open, said he came back for a simple reason. "I needed to make some money," he said. "I had to make an effort. When you're not playing well, you have the same pressures arookie does. Making money is on my mind and trying to get my card back." Cochran, No. 154 on this year's moneyhlist, ran off a string of four straight birdies and turned at 5-under. His bogey-free round included a three- putt par at No. 16. "I'm very surprised,"aCochran said. "Nothing I've done lately mer- ited shooting a round like this. Maybe now I can make something out of it." Waite, whose only win on the PGA Tour came in the 1993 Kemper Open, has missed the cut in 10 of the 22 events he has entered this year. He was 3-over after the first three holes but made an eight-stroke swing over the next 12 holes for his 67. "More than anything, I kept my emotions under control," he said. "That's important to me in the evolu- tion of my game." I Office Max Adivanced .: . 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